Former pro cyclist Andy Hampsten earned fame and fortune for his epic
ride over the Passo di Gavia and overall win in the 1988 Giro dItalia
(still the first and only American to do so). Yet in spite of its now
legendary status, that performance is far from Hamptens sole notable
achievement having also conquered consecutive runnings of the
Tour de Suisse in 86 and 87, finished fourth in the Tour
de France twice, and also won a TdF stage atop Alpe dHuez before
finally retiring from the sport in 1996.

Hampsten now occupies himself with a number of diverse activities although
cycling and Italy remain a common threads throughout. Much of his time
is spent organizing and running bicycle tours through Tuscany and the
Dolomites with his touring company, Cinghiale Cycling Tours, and he
also provides assistance to his brother, Steve, in designing bikes under
the Hampsten Cycles label. More recently, he has also been dabbling
with the cycling clothing business and started up "a little olive
oil company" with his girlfriend.

Hampstens racing career may be over a decade behind him but youd
hardly guess by looking at him. Now in his mid-40s, he is still barely
4kg (9lb) over his old 60kg (132lb) racing weight thanks to plenty of
saddle time (both recreational and commuting) exploring the mountains
around his Boulder, Colorado home base.

These days, Hampstens primary road rig is a Moots-built Hampsten
Cycles Strada Bianca Ti that, ironically, is nearly perfectly suited
for the type of steep mountainous dirt roads that he had to cross on
that fateful day in 88. "If I had one bike, this would be
it," he said. "I ride this 90 percent of the time."

The cleanly welded titanium frame and carbon Wound Up fork are designed
around the larger 28-33mm tires that he prefers for their ability to
handle smooth pavement or cobbles with near-equal aplomb as well as
their awesome cornering traits. Built-in S&S couplers on this Travelissimo
variant add obvious weight but they also allow for easy transport when
it comes time to fly.

As a naturally gifted climber, Hampsten made do with the somewhat limited
gear ratios available to him back in the day but now admits an affinity
for todays new compact offerings. "[Back then] I used 39/53
[up front]," he said. "For a mountain stage I would do 23,
21, 19, 17 etc. or 25, 23, 21, 19, 17. If there was something nuts in
Italy like the Tre Cime Lavaredo or the Mortirolo then
I would go to a 28. I never used even-numbered climbing cogs other than
the 28. Never. Not that I am superstitious; I just hate how every time
I looked at even numbers for climbing cogs my palms would get sweaty.
Odd only. I can only really get excited about my bikes now if they have
compact cranks; not having super climbing gears on my bikes limits my
rides to boring terrain. Compact gearing for racers is for silly steep
climbs, although the 50-11 would have worked for a top gear for me."

Hampstens current titanium creation admittedly bears little physical
resemblance to the old John Slawta-built (of Land Shark fame) steel
frame depicted in that infamous Gavia poster, but he insists there are
still strong similarities between then and now.

"Basically [its] the same thing: neutral handling where
if I lean a little bit, it goes the way I want to," he said. "I
dont like criterium bikes or quick handling bikes that steer quicker.
Sometimes racers want that; its some old myth that criteriums
are faster if your bike oversteers or whatever they do. In coming with
that, we get low bottom brackets: European racer-bike bottom brackets.
With that neutral handling, its not rocket science. Its
pretty much bikes like theyve been made for 80 years or so."

While the general personality of his bike apparently havent
changed much, the position certainly has. According to Hampsten, "In
'88 I had a crazy high seat position, nearly 2cm higher than now. It
worked then and feels all wrong now. I used to be longer on the bike,
too. I shortened my top tube length by 2cm when I stopped racing, and
raised my bars up at least 2cm."

Higher and shorter position notwithstanding, Hampsten is still as graceful
on the bike as ever and impressively fit as evidenced by our leisurely
(by his standards, that is) jaunt up to the old mining town of Gold
Hill, roughly 900m (3,000ft) above Boulder at an elevation of 2530m
(8,300ft). Life is easier for Hampsten these days but he certainly looks
back at his racing career fondly.

"Bike racing was the most fun Ive ever had," he said.
"I have a hard time reading interviews for racers that grumble
too much about how it is, that no one understands... its a blast.
I had a blast. But Im having a super, super good time now. Im
pretty happy not being any busier than I am; Im as busy as I want
to be. Life is awesome."